Herschel Sims plans to play his final three seasons of college football at Lamar University, if his Facebook page is to be believed. The highly rated high school recruit listed Lamar as his current school, according to a change to his Facebook profile Saturday night. He also lists Beaumont as his current city of residence. The next session of summer school classes begin Thursday.

Lamar coach Ray Woodard said in a text message Sunday he “can’t start start responding to comments on Facebook” when asked if Sims will attend the school.

According to a police report cited by The Oklahoman, Sims is being charged with the two felonies for stealing a former teammate’s ID card, accessing his bank account and making separate withdrawals of $500 and $200, just hours apart. The incidents took place April 27.

Sims was charged with the crimes June 5, four days after Oklahoma State coach Mike Gundy kicked him off the team, the paper reported.

Sims said during a June 21 court appearance he planned to attend a school in Texas, the paper reported.

As a true freshman in 2011, Sims did not play in the first four games but finished third on the team with 242 rushing yards on just 31 carries (7.8 yards per rush). He had 100-yard rushing games against Baylor (104) and Texas Tech (111).

At Abilene, Sims ran for 2,352 yards as a junior and 709 during a senior season plagued by injury, according to his Oklahoma State bio.

The Lamar rushing offense ran for a league-low three touchdowns against Southland Conference opponents last season. The Cardinals (4-7, 2-5 Southland in 2011) played most of the season without injured DePauldrick Garrett, now a senior returning from a separated shoulder. Garrett’s four touchdowns to open the 2011 season against Texas College set a single-game school record.

Lamar has already announced former Oklahoma State players Kevin Johnson (wide receiver) and Joe Okafor (defensive end) as transfers.

The Oklahoma State transfers will be eligible to play immediately. The NCAA does not require players who transfer down a level to sit out a season.